SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 45
Concept of Costs and
Cost calculation
Health Economic
BPH 3rd year
• Costs are bad things endured or good things
lost. Government action -- spending, taxing,
borrowing, regulating, changing property
rights or liability rules, whatever -- typically
creates both "goods" and "bads." As Kip
Viscusi (1996) explains.
Concept and Definition
Definition of cost
• The cost of goods and services is the value of the resources spent
for the acquisition of those goods or services, which may be
expressed as monetary or non -monetary values (Carrin, 1995).
• Health economists define cost as the value of resources used for
the production of good health. The relation between medical
inputs and output can be captured in what economists called
production function.
• Cost generally refers to the price that must be paid for an item.
• Accounts always concern with financial statement. They tend to
retrospective look at a firm’s finances.
• An economist thinks of cost differently from an accountant.
Health Economists and we hope managers take a forward looking
view of the firm.
•
• They are concerned with what cost is expected to
be in future, and with how the firm might be able
to rearrange its resources to lower its cost and
improves its profitability. They must therefore be
concerned with opportunity cost.
Why study cost
• Information on the cost of health care is required
for many different purposes
• Collection and analysis data on programme costs
can provide considerable useful information on
primary health services of all kinds.
• To indicate the amount of funds ( from all sources) likely
to be required to continue, programes they can help the
program manager to assess the use of personnel in
delivering primary health care (PHC) and the efficiency
in putting supplies , transport , resources and other
inputs to work.
• For the assessment efficiency in an input /output of any
program.
• To plan services while staying within budget. to
compare efficiency between different facilities.
• To allocate cost to different programs in order to set
prices (for consumers, insurance funds, or for use in
contracting) we also need .
• To understand costs in order to priorities between different
health care interventions.
• Cost information is a vital managerial tool, but it usually has to
be interpreted together with other information. For example, to
priorities between different programs requires information not
just on cost but also on benefits.
• Similarly, assessing efficiency by looking at costs alone would
be misleading: the quality of the activities and the outcomes
must be compared too.
• Costs are often the start of the process of investigation, but
they are rarely the end.
Different types of costs in health care;
• Accounting cost, financial and economic cost;
• Opportunity cost;
• Direct and indirect cost;
• Total, average, and marginal cost;
• Capital and recurrent cost,
• Fixed and variable cost,
• Tangible and intangible cost,
• Contingency cost ;
• Short term and long term cost;
• Explicit and implicit cost;
• Historical and replacement cost;
• Transaction cost
• Sunk cost.
• Money and real cost
• Product and period cost
Accounting and financial cost
• Accounting cost : The accounting cost of goods or services
may be defined as the monetary value of actual expenditure
for the acquisition of these goods and services. For
example: If the stethoscope used by a health worker HW is
purchased at a market price of Us $200,its cost is
effectively US$200. This Cost includes all such business
expenses that are recorded in the book of accounts of a
business firm as acceptable business expenses. Such
expenses include expenses like cost of raw material,
wages and salaries, various direct and indirect business,
overheads, depreciation Taxes etc.
• Accounting Profit = Sales Income -
Accounting Cost
• Accountants define cost in terms of resources
consumed. Accountants always have been
concerned with firms’ financial statements.
Accountants tend to take a retrospective look
at firms finances because they keep trace of
assets and liabilities and evaluate past
performance. The accounting costs are useful
for managing taxation needs as well as to
calculate profit or loss of the firm.
• Economist cost : Economists take forward-
looking view of the firm. They are concerned
with what cost is expected to be in the future
and how the firm might be able to rearrange its
resources to lower its costs and improve its
profitability. They must therefore be concerned
with opportunity cost. Since the only cost that
matters for business decisions are the future
costs, it is the economic costs that are used for
decision-making.
• Economic Cost on the other hand includes all the accounting
expenses as well as the Opportunity cost of a business firm.
Economic Cost and Economic Profit is thus calculated as
follows:
• Economic Cost = Accounting Cost (Explicit Costs) +
Opportunity Cost
• Economic Profit = Total Revenues - (Accounting Cost +
Opportunity Cost).
• Hence, from the accountant's standpoint, costs are retrospective
and objective -- they are seen from the perspective of a detached
observer .Accountants usually define costs as flows: costs reflect
changes in stocks (reductions in good things, increases in bad
things) over a fixed temporal interval.
Common in both concepts:
• Accountants and economists both that, costs should be measured
in terms of dollars (money).
• Both agree that cost ( benefit ) are born by individual along with
organization.
• Cost are to do something . Both follows the principle of Cost
Accounting Standards Board (CASB) calls it).
• provide perfect markets and information and holding for what
and to whom constant, the two concepts may be made to collapse
to a single identity.
• Cost can be measure in present value rather than future.
Opportunity Cost
• The resources of any firm operating in the
market are limited and investment options are
many. The firm therefore has to decide or select
only those investment opportunities/options
which provide the firm with the best return or
best income on investment.
• This means that if a firm can invest money/
resources only in one investment option then the
firm will select that investment option which
promises best return on investment to the firm.
• This can also be understood by a simple example
- Let us assume that an individual has two job
offers in hand. One job offer is promising him a
salary of Rs. 30, 000 per month while the other
job offer will ensure salary of Rs. 25, 000 per
month. If the job profile and other factors related
to the job offers are more or less same then it can
be easily expected that the individual will select
the job offer which will provide him with higher
salary that is salary of Rs. 30, 000 per month.
Thus, in this case, the opportunity cost is the
return involved in the next best alternative i.e;
Salary of Rs. 25, 000 in the next best job offer.
Concept of opportunity cost is closely related to the concept
of Economic profit or Economic Rent.
Economic Profit is thus earned only when following is true for
the Firm:
• Income of a Firm > Various Costs of Operations +
Opportunity Cost
• OR Economic Profit = Earnings or Revenue of Firm -
Economic Costs. Here Economic Cost is various expenses of
the business plus the opportunity cost
Case study :
Economists often talk about the “opportunity cost” of a particular activity. By
this they mean next best use to which the resources could have been put, if
they had not been consumed in this activity. This measure how much is ‘given
up” by carrying out the activity (and therefore it’s real cost)
• Let us take the example of Rita visiting the Maternity hospital, at Thapathali.
What are the real costs to her?
• First, there is the value of the time she spends. What would she have been
doing if she had not been attending? She might have been working and the
value of that production lost is one opportunity cost. Or she might have been
talking care of her children. That, too, is valuable, even though it may not
have a direct value in money terms.
• It has value because she enjoys it, and both she and her children. That too is
valuable, even though it may not have a direct value in money terms. It has
value because she enjoys it, and both she and the children gain from their
interaction.
• It also has value in the sense that there is cost to replacing her.-for example,
she may owe the neighbor a favor for looking after them while she is away.
These cost tend to be ignored because they may not involve actual transfer of
money.
• Nevertheless they are real to the patients and influence
decisions about which services to use.
• In addition, there may be a small direct financial cost: the
cost of travel, a small direct financial cost. The cost of travel,
a small gift to the doctor and buying some drugs in the
market after the visit. These resources could have been used
for food or some other desirable commodity. Again, this
alternative use measure the opportunity cost of the visit.
Direct and Indirect cost
• Direct cost include the value of all the goods, services, and
other resource that are consumed in the provision of an
intervention or in dealing with the side effects, or other
current and future consequences linked to it
• Indirect cost to refer to productivity gains or losses related
to illness or death
Examples of Direct costs
• Health professionals time
• Supplies and equipment
• Capital costs
• Cost for treating side effects and complications
• Costs of treating conditions during added years
of life
Direct non-health care costs
• Child care costs
• Home care services
• Transportation
• Special nutrition
• Time cost
Indirect costs
• Intangible or psychic costs
• Productivity gains or losses (income x days)
EXPLICIT AND IMPLICIT COSTS
• Explicit costs are those costs that involve an actual payment to
other parties. Therefore, an explicit cost is the monetary payment
made by a firm for use of an input owned or controlled by
others. Explicit costs are also referred to as accounting costs. For
example, a firm pays Rs. 100 per day to a worker and engages
15 workers for 10 days, the explicit cost will be Rs. 15,000
incurred by the firm. Other types of explicit costs include
purchase of raw materials, renting a building, amount spent on
advertising etc.
• Implicit costs represent the value of foregone opportunities but
do not involve an actual cash payment. Implicit costs are just as
important as explicit costs but are sometimes neglected because
they are not as obvious. For example, a manager who runs his
own business fore goes the salary that could have been earned
working for someone else as we have seen in our earlier
example. This implicit cost generally is not reflected in
accounting statements, but rational decision-making requires
that it be considered.
• Therefore, an implicit cost is the opportunity cost of using
resources that are owned or controlled by the owners of the
firm. The implicit cost is the foregone return, the owner of the
firm could have received had they used their own resources in
their best alternative use rather than using the resources for
their own firm’s production.
Cost and benefit in Economics Evaluation
Patients
Fees
Drugs
Travel etc
Direct
Health
Services
Other
organizations
Service
delivery
Higher level support
cost
Ministrie
s
Firms
Recurrent cost
Capital cost
Indirect
Patients Others
Educational effects production or
loss
Intangibl
e
Pain
Anxiety
Disability
Loss of
quality of life
Source: Witter Sophie et al (2000)
Averages cost (AC):
• Average cost is the cost of per unit of output. Average total cost
(A|TC) is the firm’s total cost divided by its level of output.
Basically, average total cost tells us the per unit cost of
production. By comparing the average total cost to the price of
product, we can determine whether production is profitable.
AC=TC/Q
• Average total cost (ATC) has two components: Average fixed cost
(AVC) and Average variables cost (AVC).
• Average fixed cost is the fixed cost divided by the level of output
(AVC=FC/Q)
• Average variable cost is the variable cost divided by level output
(AVC=VC/Q)
• Short run average cost is U-shaped.
• In the long run all costs are variables because more fixed
assets can be acquired or surplus capacity scrapped.
• The shape and slope of the long run average cost curve,
when all costs are variable, will be determined by the
extent of long run economies of scale.
Marginal Cost (MC):
• Marginal cost sometimes called incremental cost is increase in
cost that results from producing one extra unit of output.
Because fixed cost does not change as firm’s level of output
changes, marginal cost is equal to the increase in variable cost or
the increase in total cost that results from an extra unit of output.
We can therefore write marginal cost as
• MC=∆VC/∆Q=Change in variable cost/change in output
level=∆TC/∆Q
• Marginal costs tell us how much it will cost to expand the firm’s
output by one unit.
Unit of
outputs
Total fixed
cost
Total variable
cost
Total cost (2)
+(3)
Average fixed
cost
(2) /(1)
Average
variable cost
(3)/1
Average cost
(5) +(6)
Marginal
cost
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
0 30 0 30 - - -
1 30 10 40 30 10 40 10
2 30 18 48 15 9 24 8
3 30 24 54 10 8 18 6
4 30 32 62 7.5 8 15.5 8
5 30 50 80 6 10 16 18
6 30 72 102 5 12 17 22
Components of cost
• The cost of production has two components (a) fixed
cost(FC)and (b) Variable cost (VC)
• Fixed cost (FC) =costs which do not vary with the
quantity of output produced. Example: Cost of hospital
infrastructure, equipments, etc are fixed cost of producing
health services. Cost behavior: Remain constant over the
relevant range
• Variable cost (VC)=Costs which vary with the level of
output. Variable cost includes expenditure on salary, wages,
drugs, food supplies fee for services etc. Cost behavior:
Increase or decrease proportionally according to the level of volume
• Cost function (TC)=f(Q),total cost as a function of quantity. Total
cost (TC) = cost of producing a particular quantity of output.
• Total cost (TC)=fixed cost (FC)+variable cost (VC)
Historical and Replacement costs
• The historical cost of an asset is the actual cost incurred at the time,
the asset was originally acquired.
• Replacement cost is the cost, which will have to be incurred if that
asset is purchased now.
• The difference between the historical and replacement costs results
from price changes over time. Suppose a machine was acquired for
Rs. 50,000 in the year 1995 and the same machine can be acquired
for Rs. 1,20,000 in the year 2001.
• Here Rs. 50,000 is the historical or original cost of the machine
and Rs. 1,20,000 is its replacement cost. The difference of Rs.70,000
between the two costs has resulted because of the price change of
the machine during the period.
• During periods of substantial price variations,
historical costs are poor indicators of actual
costs. Historical costs and replacement costs
represent two ways of reflecting the costs of
assets in the balance sheet and establishing the
costs that are used to determine net income.
• Sunk costs are expenditures that have been made in the past or
must be paid in the future as part of contractual agreement or
previous decision. For example, the money already paid for
machinery, equipment, inventory and future rental payments on
a warehouse that must be paid as part of a long term
lease agreement are sunk costs.
• In general, sunk costs are not relevant to economic decisions.
For example, the purchase of specialized equipment designed
to order for a plant. We assume that the equipment can be used
to do only what it was originally designed for and cannot be
converted for alternative use.The expenditure on this equipment
is a sunk cost. Also, because this equipment has no alternative
use its opportunity cost is zero and, hence, sunk costs are
not relevant to economic decisions. Sometimes the sunk costs
are also called as non-avoidable or non-escapable costs.
Contingency cost
• When estimating the cost for a project , product or other item or
investment, there is always uncertainty as to the precise content
of all items in the estimate, how work will be performed, what
work conditions will be like when the project is executed and so
on.
• These uncertainties are risks to the project . Some refer to these
risks as "known-unknowns" because the estimator is aware of
them, and based on past experience, can even estimate their
probable costs. The estimated costs of the known-unknowns is
referred to by cost estimators as cost contingency
• In micro economics , the long run is the conceptual time period
in which there are no fixed factors of production so that there
are no constraints preventing changing the output level by
changing the capital stock or by entering or leaving an industry.
• The long run contrasts with the short run, in which some
factors are variable and others are fixed, constraining entry or
exit from an industry.
• In macro economics , the long run is the period when the
general price level, contractual wage rates, and expectations
adjust fully to the state of the economy, in contrast to the short
run when these variables may not fully adjust.
• In economics and related disciplines, a transaction cost is
a cost incurred in making an economic exchange (restated: the
cost of participating in a market)
• Transaction costs can be divided into three broad categories. Search
and information costs are costs such as in determining that the
required good is available on the market, which has the lowest price,
etc.
• Bargaining costs are the costs required to come to an acceptable
agreement with the other party to the transaction, drawing up an
appropriate contract and so on. In game theory this is analyzed for
instance in the game of chicken On asset markets and in market b
microstructure the transaction cost is some function of the distance
between the bid and ask .
• Policing and enforcement costs are the costs of making sure the other
party sticks to the terms of the contract, and taking appropriate action
(often through the legal system ) if this turns out not to be the case.
• For example, the buyer of a used car faces a variety of different
transaction costs. The search costs are the costs of finding a car and
determining the car's condition.
• The bargaining costs are the costs of negotiating a price with the
seller. The policing and enforcement costs are the costs of ensuring
that the seller delivers the car in the promised condition.
Money Cost of production is the actual monetary expenditure
made by company in the production process. Money cost
thus includes all the business expenses which involve outlay
of money to support business operations. For example the
monetary expenditure on purchase of raw material, payment
of wages and salaries, payment of rent and other charges of
business etc can be termed as Money Cost.
Real Cost of production or business operation on the other
hand includes all such expenses/costs of business which
may or may not involve actual monetary expenditure. For
example if owner of a business venture uses his personal
land and building for running the business venture and
he/she does not charge any rent for the same then such head
will not be considered/included while computing the Money
Cost but this head will be part of Real Cost computation.
Here the cost involved is the Opportunity Cost of the land
and building.
• Cost classification from program and budget
point of view
Capital
Vehicles: bicycle, motor cycle, four wheel
drive Vehicles, trucks
Equipment-ray machine, micro scope, other
equipment with a unit cost (price) of US$100 or
more
Buildings, space: hospital, health centers,
administrative office, storage facilities
Training: Training activities for health personnel
that occur only once or rarely
Social mobilization, non recurrent: social
mobilization activities, eg promotion, publicity
campaigns that occur only once or rarely
Cost Classification*
by inputs by function/activity By level By source By currency
Recurrent cost
Personnel (All type): supervisors, health workers,
administrators, technicians, consultants, casual labors
Supplies: Drugs, syringes, slides, small equipment (unit cost
of less than US$100)
Vehicles, operation and maintenance: petrol, diesel,
lubricants, tires, spare parts, registration, insurance
Buildings, operation and maintenance: electricity, water
heating, fuel telephone, telex, insurance, cleaning, painting,
plumbing, roofing, electricity supply/appliances
Training, recurrent (eg short in services course)
Social; mobilization: operating costs
Other operating costs not included above
Training
Supervision
Management
Monitoring and Evaluation
Logistic and transport
Central level
Regional Level
District Level
Grassroots Level
Ministry of Health other government ministries
Local Government Bodies International Donors
Bilateral Agency Charity
Private Organizations Community groups
Individuals Etc
Marginal cost versus average cost
• Average cost measures total costs per unit,
• Marginal cost is the additional cost of producing one
more unit of service, it varies as volume changes.
Q. Why short run cost curve is U
shaped?
Short run Cost curve is composed of Total Cost, Total Fixed cost and Total
Variable Cost
Total cost = Total fixed cost + Total Variable cost
(Average cost x Quantity) = (Average fixed cost x Quantity) + (Average
Variable cost x Quantity)
At first the Average Cost is too high due to large Fixed Costs and small
outputs.
As output increases, the Average Cost accordingly falls.
When diminishing returns due to increasing variable cost, then the Average
Costs start to increase
This gives the Short Run Cost Curve a “U”-Shape.
Q. Why is the long run average cost
curve L shaped?
• Long run average cost curve is L shaped in some industries
because of the fact that they represent indefinite economies of
scale derived from the optimal utilization of all the factors of
production.
• In such conditions, it is quite possible that firms having L
shaped long run average cost might be a bigger firm which has
more chances to turn in to monopoly in the future because of
more access to the resources and lesser chances of expected
new entrants in the market.
• L-shaped curve shows that per unit cost for producing a
product decline initially and then forms L-shaped which shows
cost advantages for indefinite period.
Issues to be considered in cost calculation

More Related Content

What's hot

Health care financing
Health care financing Health care financing
Health care financing Pharm Net
 
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health Care
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health CareCost Benefit Analysis in Health Care
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health CarePrabesh Ghimire
 
Health care finance and budget
Health care finance and budgetHealth care finance and budget
Health care finance and budgetVaishnavi Madhavan
 
Cost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysisCost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysiszeekooo
 
Demand in health care
Demand in health careDemand in health care
Demand in health careFasika Mengiste
 
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J H
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J HCost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J H
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J HNaveen j h
 
Health Economics and Health Finance :Jordan Health Policy Directions
Health Economics  and Health Finance  :Jordan Health Policy Directions   Health Economics  and Health Finance  :Jordan Health Policy Directions
Health Economics and Health Finance :Jordan Health Policy Directions Musa Ajlouni
 
Health economics
Health economicsHealth economics
Health economicsDevangi Sharma
 
Health Financing Within the Overall Health System
Health Financing Within the Overall Health SystemHealth Financing Within the Overall Health System
Health Financing Within the Overall Health SystemHFG Project
 
Healthcare Economic evaluation
Healthcare Economic evaluationHealthcare Economic evaluation
Healthcare Economic evaluationBPKIHS
 
Health policy and planning
Health policy and planning Health policy and planning
Health policy and planning Rizwan S A
 
Sources of finance in healthcare
Sources of finance in healthcareSources of finance in healthcare
Sources of finance in healthcareSAM VIVEK
 
Cost effectiveness and cost containment
Cost effectiveness and cost containmentCost effectiveness and cost containment
Cost effectiveness and cost containmentSaumya Srivastava
 
Health care financing
Health care financingHealth care financing
Health care financingdev224224
 

What's hot (20)

Health care financing
Health care financing Health care financing
Health care financing
 
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health Care
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health CareCost Benefit Analysis in Health Care
Cost Benefit Analysis in Health Care
 
Health care finance and budget
Health care finance and budgetHealth care finance and budget
Health care finance and budget
 
Cost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysisCost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysis
 
Demand in health care
Demand in health careDemand in health care
Demand in health care
 
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J H
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J HCost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J H
Cost effective analysis in health care (Nursing) Naveen J H
 
Health Economics and Health Finance :Jordan Health Policy Directions
Health Economics  and Health Finance  :Jordan Health Policy Directions   Health Economics  and Health Finance  :Jordan Health Policy Directions
Health Economics and Health Finance :Jordan Health Policy Directions
 
Health economics
Health economicsHealth economics
Health economics
 
Health care financing
Health care financingHealth care financing
Health care financing
 
Cost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysisCost effectiveness analysis
Cost effectiveness analysis
 
Health Financing Within the Overall Health System
Health Financing Within the Overall Health SystemHealth Financing Within the Overall Health System
Health Financing Within the Overall Health System
 
Healthcare Economic evaluation
Healthcare Economic evaluationHealthcare Economic evaluation
Healthcare Economic evaluation
 
Health policy and planning
Health policy and planning Health policy and planning
Health policy and planning
 
Economic evaluation
Economic evaluationEconomic evaluation
Economic evaluation
 
Sources of finance in healthcare
Sources of finance in healthcareSources of finance in healthcare
Sources of finance in healthcare
 
Health economics what is it
Health economics what is itHealth economics what is it
Health economics what is it
 
Cost effectiveness and cost containment
Cost effectiveness and cost containmentCost effectiveness and cost containment
Cost effectiveness and cost containment
 
Health economics
Health economicsHealth economics
Health economics
 
Health economics
Health economics Health economics
Health economics
 
Health care financing
Health care financingHealth care financing
Health care financing
 

Similar to Health care cost

5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering
5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering
5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for EngineeringRoshanNayak26
 
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptxIHSANMOHAMMED8
 
Principles of economics
Principles of economicsPrinciples of economics
Principles of economicsSachin Paurush
 
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financing
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financingConcept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financing
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financingSahdev Bishnoi
 
Management Accounting
Management AccountingManagement Accounting
Management Accountingakkiluvugals9951
 
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdf
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdfPricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdf
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdfcharlesmartial77
 
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics Mohammed Jasir PV
 
Introduction to consumer behaviour
Introduction to consumer behaviourIntroduction to consumer behaviour
Introduction to consumer behaviourDr. C.V. Suresh Babu
 
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPE
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPEPart II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPE
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPEtwilacrt6k5
 
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptx
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptxFINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptx
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptxMuyangaMark1
 
Principles of economics | Fundamental of Economics
Principles of economics | Fundamental of EconomicsPrinciples of economics | Fundamental of Economics
Principles of economics | Fundamental of EconomicsSachin Paurush
 
Practice Price vs Value
Practice Price vs ValuePractice Price vs Value
Practice Price vs ValueDavid L Broussard
 
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptxredminoteproplus795
 
Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics
Nature and Scope of Managerial EconomicsNature and Scope of Managerial Economics
Nature and Scope of Managerial Economicsdvy92010
 
managerial economics application
managerial economics applicationmanagerial economics application
managerial economics applicationMATHEW V JOSEPH
 
Student Name.docx
Student Name.docxStudent Name.docx
Student Name.docxronicacoorey1
 

Similar to Health care cost (20)

5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering
5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering
5.5. cost benefit.pptx Economics for Engineering
 
Value for money assessment
Value for money assessmentValue for money assessment
Value for money assessment
 
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx
0 - HEIST_Cost workshop 2 Sharma Introduction CFAR Feb 2017.pptx
 
Principles of economics
Principles of economicsPrinciples of economics
Principles of economics
 
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financing
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financingConcept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financing
Concept of efficiency,effectivenes,Role of health care financing
 
Management Accounting
Management AccountingManagement Accounting
Management Accounting
 
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdf
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdfPricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdf
Pricing Strategy for the third year- Updated.pdf
 
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics
Basic Principles in Economics and Managerial Economics
 
Introduction to consumer behaviour
Introduction to consumer behaviourIntroduction to consumer behaviour
Introduction to consumer behaviour
 
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPE
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPEPart II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPE
Part II Record Financial Operations CHAPTER 5 EXPE
 
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptx
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptxFINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptx
FINANCE MG'T FOR NON-FINANCE MANAGERS.pptx
 
Principles of economics | Fundamental of Economics
Principles of economics | Fundamental of EconomicsPrinciples of economics | Fundamental of Economics
Principles of economics | Fundamental of Economics
 
Mba 2
Mba 2Mba 2
Mba 2
 
Practice Price vs Value
Practice Price vs ValuePractice Price vs Value
Practice Price vs Value
 
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx
3eb1565b-7400-45ad-9255-f1329e1b1c32.pptx
 
Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics
Nature and Scope of Managerial EconomicsNature and Scope of Managerial Economics
Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics
 
managerial economics application
managerial economics applicationmanagerial economics application
managerial economics application
 
Managing financial resources
Managing financial resourcesManaging financial resources
Managing financial resources
 
9 Cost analysis
9 Cost analysis9 Cost analysis
9 Cost analysis
 
Student Name.docx
Student Name.docxStudent Name.docx
Student Name.docx
 

More from Ankita Kunwar

School health program
School health programSchool health program
School health programAnkita Kunwar
 
Implementation of hp & he
Implementation of hp & heImplementation of hp & he
Implementation of hp & heAnkita Kunwar
 
Principles of health economics
Principles of health economicsPrinciples of health economics
Principles of health economicsAnkita Kunwar
 
National income
National incomeNational income
National incomeAnkita Kunwar
 
Measuring demand elasticity
Measuring demand elasticityMeasuring demand elasticity
Measuring demand elasticityAnkita Kunwar
 
Health system and financing
Health system and financingHealth system and financing
Health system and financingAnkita Kunwar
 
Health care demand
Health care demandHealth care demand
Health care demandAnkita Kunwar
 
violence against women (Nepal)
violence against women   (Nepal)violence against women   (Nepal)
violence against women (Nepal)Ankita Kunwar
 
Operational definition
Operational definitionOperational definition
Operational definitionAnkita Kunwar
 
Hypothesis and Variables
 Hypothesis and Variables Hypothesis and Variables
Hypothesis and VariablesAnkita Kunwar
 
Research methodology
Research methodologyResearch methodology
Research methodologyAnkita Kunwar
 
Bamako initaitive
Bamako initaitive Bamako initaitive
Bamako initaitive Ankita Kunwar
 
Quality assurance cycle
Quality assurance cycle Quality assurance cycle
Quality assurance cycle Ankita Kunwar
 
Quality assurance in health care
Quality assurance in health care Quality assurance in health care
Quality assurance in health care Ankita Kunwar
 
Urban Health Care-Nepal
Urban Health Care-NepalUrban Health Care-Nepal
Urban Health Care-NepalAnkita Kunwar
 

More from Ankita Kunwar (20)

School health program
School health programSchool health program
School health program
 
School health
School healthSchool health
School health
 
Implementation of hp & he
Implementation of hp & heImplementation of hp & he
Implementation of hp & he
 
Surveilance
SurveilanceSurveilance
Surveilance
 
Principles of health economics
Principles of health economicsPrinciples of health economics
Principles of health economics
 
National income
National incomeNational income
National income
 
Measuring demand elasticity
Measuring demand elasticityMeasuring demand elasticity
Measuring demand elasticity
 
Health system and financing
Health system and financingHealth system and financing
Health system and financing
 
Health care demand
Health care demandHealth care demand
Health care demand
 
violence against women (Nepal)
violence against women   (Nepal)violence against women   (Nepal)
violence against women (Nepal)
 
Human rights
Human rightsHuman rights
Human rights
 
Operational definition
Operational definitionOperational definition
Operational definition
 
Hypothesis and Variables
 Hypothesis and Variables Hypothesis and Variables
Hypothesis and Variables
 
EHC & FHS
EHC & FHSEHC & FHS
EHC & FHS
 
Research methodology
Research methodologyResearch methodology
Research methodology
 
Bamako initaitive
Bamako initaitive Bamako initaitive
Bamako initaitive
 
Quality assurance cycle
Quality assurance cycle Quality assurance cycle
Quality assurance cycle
 
Quality assurance in health care
Quality assurance in health care Quality assurance in health care
Quality assurance in health care
 
jestha
jesthajestha
jestha
 
Urban Health Care-Nepal
Urban Health Care-NepalUrban Health Care-Nepal
Urban Health Care-Nepal
 

Recently uploaded

Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbers
Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbersBook Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbers
Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbersnarwatsonia7
 
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Availablenarwatsonia7
 
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safe
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% SafeBangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safe
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safenarwatsonia7
 
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...narwatsonia7
 
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...Miss joya
 
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbai
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service MumbaiLow Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbai
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbaisonalikaur4
 
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Surat
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service SuratCall Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Surat
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Suratnarwatsonia7
 
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...narwatsonia7
 
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Service
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls ServiceCall Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Service
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Servicesonalikaur4
 
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...Miss joya
 
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknow
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service LucknowCall Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknow
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknownarwatsonia7
 
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...narwatsonia7
 
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...narwatsonia7
 
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.MiadAlsulami
 
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Availablenarwatsonia7
 
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call NowSonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call NowRiya Pathan
 
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girls
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy GirlsCall Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girls
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girlsnehamumbai
 
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalore
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service BangaloreCall Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalore
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalorenarwatsonia7
 
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...Miss joya
 
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...narwatsonia7
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbers
Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbersBook Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbers
Book Call Girls in Kasavanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone numbers
 
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Hebbal Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safe
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% SafeBangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safe
Bangalore Call Girls Majestic 📞 9907093804 High Profile Service 100% Safe
 
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...
Russian Call Girl Brookfield - 7001305949 Escorts Service 50% Off with Cash O...
 
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...
Russian Call Girls in Pune Riya 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call gi...
 
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbai
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service MumbaiLow Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbai
Low Rate Call Girls Mumbai Suman 9910780858 Independent Escort Service Mumbai
 
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Surat
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service SuratCall Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Surat
Call Girl Surat Madhuri 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Surat
 
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
Call Girls Kanakapura Road Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service A...
 
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Service
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls ServiceCall Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Service
Call Girls Thane Just Call 9910780858 Get High Class Call Girls Service
 
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...
College Call Girls Pune Mira 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girls...
 
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknow
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service LucknowCall Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknow
Call Girl Lucknow Mallika 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Lucknow
 
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...
Call Girls Service in Bommanahalli - 7001305949 with real photos and phone nu...
 
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...
Housewife Call Girls Bangalore - Call 7001305949 Rs-3500 with A/C Room Cash o...
 
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.
Artifacts in Nuclear Medicine with Identifying and resolving artifacts.
 
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service AvailableCall Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Call Girls Whitefield Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
 
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call NowSonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
Sonagachi Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
 
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girls
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy GirlsCall Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girls
Call Girls In Andheri East Call 9920874524 Book Hot And Sexy Girls
 
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalore
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service BangaloreCall Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalore
Call Girl Bangalore Nandini 7001305949 Independent Escort Service Bangalore
 
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...
Low Rate Call Girls Pune Esha 9907093804 Short 1500 Night 6000 Best call girl...
 
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
Call Girls Frazer Town Just Call 7001305949 Top Class Call Girl Service Avail...
 

Health care cost

  • 1. Concept of Costs and Cost calculation Health Economic BPH 3rd year
  • 2. • Costs are bad things endured or good things lost. Government action -- spending, taxing, borrowing, regulating, changing property rights or liability rules, whatever -- typically creates both "goods" and "bads." As Kip Viscusi (1996) explains.
  • 3. Concept and Definition Definition of cost • The cost of goods and services is the value of the resources spent for the acquisition of those goods or services, which may be expressed as monetary or non -monetary values (Carrin, 1995). • Health economists define cost as the value of resources used for the production of good health. The relation between medical inputs and output can be captured in what economists called production function. • Cost generally refers to the price that must be paid for an item. • Accounts always concern with financial statement. They tend to retrospective look at a firm’s finances. • An economist thinks of cost differently from an accountant. Health Economists and we hope managers take a forward looking view of the firm. •
  • 4. • They are concerned with what cost is expected to be in future, and with how the firm might be able to rearrange its resources to lower its cost and improves its profitability. They must therefore be concerned with opportunity cost. Why study cost • Information on the cost of health care is required for many different purposes • Collection and analysis data on programme costs can provide considerable useful information on primary health services of all kinds.
  • 5. • To indicate the amount of funds ( from all sources) likely to be required to continue, programes they can help the program manager to assess the use of personnel in delivering primary health care (PHC) and the efficiency in putting supplies , transport , resources and other inputs to work. • For the assessment efficiency in an input /output of any program. • To plan services while staying within budget. to compare efficiency between different facilities. • To allocate cost to different programs in order to set prices (for consumers, insurance funds, or for use in contracting) we also need .
  • 6. • To understand costs in order to priorities between different health care interventions. • Cost information is a vital managerial tool, but it usually has to be interpreted together with other information. For example, to priorities between different programs requires information not just on cost but also on benefits. • Similarly, assessing efficiency by looking at costs alone would be misleading: the quality of the activities and the outcomes must be compared too. • Costs are often the start of the process of investigation, but they are rarely the end.
  • 7. Different types of costs in health care; • Accounting cost, financial and economic cost; • Opportunity cost; • Direct and indirect cost; • Total, average, and marginal cost; • Capital and recurrent cost, • Fixed and variable cost, • Tangible and intangible cost, • Contingency cost ; • Short term and long term cost; • Explicit and implicit cost; • Historical and replacement cost; • Transaction cost • Sunk cost. • Money and real cost • Product and period cost
  • 8. Accounting and financial cost • Accounting cost : The accounting cost of goods or services may be defined as the monetary value of actual expenditure for the acquisition of these goods and services. For example: If the stethoscope used by a health worker HW is purchased at a market price of Us $200,its cost is effectively US$200. This Cost includes all such business expenses that are recorded in the book of accounts of a business firm as acceptable business expenses. Such expenses include expenses like cost of raw material, wages and salaries, various direct and indirect business, overheads, depreciation Taxes etc.
  • 9. • Accounting Profit = Sales Income - Accounting Cost • Accountants define cost in terms of resources consumed. Accountants always have been concerned with firms’ financial statements. Accountants tend to take a retrospective look at firms finances because they keep trace of assets and liabilities and evaluate past performance. The accounting costs are useful for managing taxation needs as well as to calculate profit or loss of the firm.
  • 10. • Economist cost : Economists take forward- looking view of the firm. They are concerned with what cost is expected to be in the future and how the firm might be able to rearrange its resources to lower its costs and improve its profitability. They must therefore be concerned with opportunity cost. Since the only cost that matters for business decisions are the future costs, it is the economic costs that are used for decision-making.
  • 11. • Economic Cost on the other hand includes all the accounting expenses as well as the Opportunity cost of a business firm. Economic Cost and Economic Profit is thus calculated as follows: • Economic Cost = Accounting Cost (Explicit Costs) + Opportunity Cost • Economic Profit = Total Revenues - (Accounting Cost + Opportunity Cost). • Hence, from the accountant's standpoint, costs are retrospective and objective -- they are seen from the perspective of a detached observer .Accountants usually define costs as flows: costs reflect changes in stocks (reductions in good things, increases in bad things) over a fixed temporal interval.
  • 12. Common in both concepts: • Accountants and economists both that, costs should be measured in terms of dollars (money). • Both agree that cost ( benefit ) are born by individual along with organization. • Cost are to do something . Both follows the principle of Cost Accounting Standards Board (CASB) calls it). • provide perfect markets and information and holding for what and to whom constant, the two concepts may be made to collapse to a single identity. • Cost can be measure in present value rather than future.
  • 13. Opportunity Cost • The resources of any firm operating in the market are limited and investment options are many. The firm therefore has to decide or select only those investment opportunities/options which provide the firm with the best return or best income on investment. • This means that if a firm can invest money/ resources only in one investment option then the firm will select that investment option which promises best return on investment to the firm.
  • 14. • This can also be understood by a simple example - Let us assume that an individual has two job offers in hand. One job offer is promising him a salary of Rs. 30, 000 per month while the other job offer will ensure salary of Rs. 25, 000 per month. If the job profile and other factors related to the job offers are more or less same then it can be easily expected that the individual will select the job offer which will provide him with higher salary that is salary of Rs. 30, 000 per month. Thus, in this case, the opportunity cost is the return involved in the next best alternative i.e; Salary of Rs. 25, 000 in the next best job offer.
  • 15. Concept of opportunity cost is closely related to the concept of Economic profit or Economic Rent. Economic Profit is thus earned only when following is true for the Firm: • Income of a Firm > Various Costs of Operations + Opportunity Cost • OR Economic Profit = Earnings or Revenue of Firm - Economic Costs. Here Economic Cost is various expenses of the business plus the opportunity cost
  • 16. Case study : Economists often talk about the “opportunity cost” of a particular activity. By this they mean next best use to which the resources could have been put, if they had not been consumed in this activity. This measure how much is ‘given up” by carrying out the activity (and therefore it’s real cost) • Let us take the example of Rita visiting the Maternity hospital, at Thapathali. What are the real costs to her? • First, there is the value of the time she spends. What would she have been doing if she had not been attending? She might have been working and the value of that production lost is one opportunity cost. Or she might have been talking care of her children. That, too, is valuable, even though it may not have a direct value in money terms. • It has value because she enjoys it, and both she and her children. That too is valuable, even though it may not have a direct value in money terms. It has value because she enjoys it, and both she and the children gain from their interaction. • It also has value in the sense that there is cost to replacing her.-for example, she may owe the neighbor a favor for looking after them while she is away. These cost tend to be ignored because they may not involve actual transfer of money.
  • 17. • Nevertheless they are real to the patients and influence decisions about which services to use. • In addition, there may be a small direct financial cost: the cost of travel, a small direct financial cost. The cost of travel, a small gift to the doctor and buying some drugs in the market after the visit. These resources could have been used for food or some other desirable commodity. Again, this alternative use measure the opportunity cost of the visit. Direct and Indirect cost • Direct cost include the value of all the goods, services, and other resource that are consumed in the provision of an intervention or in dealing with the side effects, or other current and future consequences linked to it • Indirect cost to refer to productivity gains or losses related to illness or death
  • 18. Examples of Direct costs • Health professionals time • Supplies and equipment • Capital costs • Cost for treating side effects and complications • Costs of treating conditions during added years of life
  • 19. Direct non-health care costs • Child care costs • Home care services • Transportation • Special nutrition • Time cost Indirect costs • Intangible or psychic costs • Productivity gains or losses (income x days)
  • 20. EXPLICIT AND IMPLICIT COSTS • Explicit costs are those costs that involve an actual payment to other parties. Therefore, an explicit cost is the monetary payment made by a firm for use of an input owned or controlled by others. Explicit costs are also referred to as accounting costs. For example, a firm pays Rs. 100 per day to a worker and engages 15 workers for 10 days, the explicit cost will be Rs. 15,000 incurred by the firm. Other types of explicit costs include purchase of raw materials, renting a building, amount spent on advertising etc. • Implicit costs represent the value of foregone opportunities but do not involve an actual cash payment. Implicit costs are just as important as explicit costs but are sometimes neglected because they are not as obvious. For example, a manager who runs his own business fore goes the salary that could have been earned working for someone else as we have seen in our earlier example. This implicit cost generally is not reflected in accounting statements, but rational decision-making requires that it be considered.
  • 21. • Therefore, an implicit cost is the opportunity cost of using resources that are owned or controlled by the owners of the firm. The implicit cost is the foregone return, the owner of the firm could have received had they used their own resources in their best alternative use rather than using the resources for their own firm’s production.
  • 22. Cost and benefit in Economics Evaluation Patients Fees Drugs Travel etc Direct Health Services Other organizations Service delivery Higher level support cost Ministrie s Firms Recurrent cost Capital cost Indirect Patients Others Educational effects production or loss Intangibl e Pain Anxiety Disability Loss of quality of life Source: Witter Sophie et al (2000)
  • 23. Averages cost (AC): • Average cost is the cost of per unit of output. Average total cost (A|TC) is the firm’s total cost divided by its level of output. Basically, average total cost tells us the per unit cost of production. By comparing the average total cost to the price of product, we can determine whether production is profitable. AC=TC/Q • Average total cost (ATC) has two components: Average fixed cost (AVC) and Average variables cost (AVC). • Average fixed cost is the fixed cost divided by the level of output (AVC=FC/Q) • Average variable cost is the variable cost divided by level output (AVC=VC/Q) • Short run average cost is U-shaped.
  • 24. • In the long run all costs are variables because more fixed assets can be acquired or surplus capacity scrapped. • The shape and slope of the long run average cost curve, when all costs are variable, will be determined by the extent of long run economies of scale. Marginal Cost (MC): • Marginal cost sometimes called incremental cost is increase in cost that results from producing one extra unit of output. Because fixed cost does not change as firm’s level of output changes, marginal cost is equal to the increase in variable cost or the increase in total cost that results from an extra unit of output. We can therefore write marginal cost as • MC=∆VC/∆Q=Change in variable cost/change in output level=∆TC/∆Q • Marginal costs tell us how much it will cost to expand the firm’s output by one unit.
  • 25. Unit of outputs Total fixed cost Total variable cost Total cost (2) +(3) Average fixed cost (2) /(1) Average variable cost (3)/1 Average cost (5) +(6) Marginal cost (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) 0 30 0 30 - - - 1 30 10 40 30 10 40 10 2 30 18 48 15 9 24 8 3 30 24 54 10 8 18 6 4 30 32 62 7.5 8 15.5 8 5 30 50 80 6 10 16 18 6 30 72 102 5 12 17 22
  • 26. Components of cost • The cost of production has two components (a) fixed cost(FC)and (b) Variable cost (VC) • Fixed cost (FC) =costs which do not vary with the quantity of output produced. Example: Cost of hospital infrastructure, equipments, etc are fixed cost of producing health services. Cost behavior: Remain constant over the relevant range • Variable cost (VC)=Costs which vary with the level of output. Variable cost includes expenditure on salary, wages, drugs, food supplies fee for services etc. Cost behavior: Increase or decrease proportionally according to the level of volume
  • 27. • Cost function (TC)=f(Q),total cost as a function of quantity. Total cost (TC) = cost of producing a particular quantity of output. • Total cost (TC)=fixed cost (FC)+variable cost (VC) Historical and Replacement costs • The historical cost of an asset is the actual cost incurred at the time, the asset was originally acquired. • Replacement cost is the cost, which will have to be incurred if that asset is purchased now. • The difference between the historical and replacement costs results from price changes over time. Suppose a machine was acquired for Rs. 50,000 in the year 1995 and the same machine can be acquired for Rs. 1,20,000 in the year 2001. • Here Rs. 50,000 is the historical or original cost of the machine and Rs. 1,20,000 is its replacement cost. The difference of Rs.70,000 between the two costs has resulted because of the price change of the machine during the period.
  • 28. • During periods of substantial price variations, historical costs are poor indicators of actual costs. Historical costs and replacement costs represent two ways of reflecting the costs of assets in the balance sheet and establishing the costs that are used to determine net income.
  • 29. • Sunk costs are expenditures that have been made in the past or must be paid in the future as part of contractual agreement or previous decision. For example, the money already paid for machinery, equipment, inventory and future rental payments on a warehouse that must be paid as part of a long term lease agreement are sunk costs. • In general, sunk costs are not relevant to economic decisions. For example, the purchase of specialized equipment designed to order for a plant. We assume that the equipment can be used to do only what it was originally designed for and cannot be converted for alternative use.The expenditure on this equipment is a sunk cost. Also, because this equipment has no alternative use its opportunity cost is zero and, hence, sunk costs are not relevant to economic decisions. Sometimes the sunk costs are also called as non-avoidable or non-escapable costs.
  • 30. Contingency cost • When estimating the cost for a project , product or other item or investment, there is always uncertainty as to the precise content of all items in the estimate, how work will be performed, what work conditions will be like when the project is executed and so on. • These uncertainties are risks to the project . Some refer to these risks as "known-unknowns" because the estimator is aware of them, and based on past experience, can even estimate their probable costs. The estimated costs of the known-unknowns is referred to by cost estimators as cost contingency
  • 31. • In micro economics , the long run is the conceptual time period in which there are no fixed factors of production so that there are no constraints preventing changing the output level by changing the capital stock or by entering or leaving an industry. • The long run contrasts with the short run, in which some factors are variable and others are fixed, constraining entry or exit from an industry. • In macro economics , the long run is the period when the general price level, contractual wage rates, and expectations adjust fully to the state of the economy, in contrast to the short run when these variables may not fully adjust. • In economics and related disciplines, a transaction cost is a cost incurred in making an economic exchange (restated: the cost of participating in a market)
  • 32. • Transaction costs can be divided into three broad categories. Search and information costs are costs such as in determining that the required good is available on the market, which has the lowest price, etc. • Bargaining costs are the costs required to come to an acceptable agreement with the other party to the transaction, drawing up an appropriate contract and so on. In game theory this is analyzed for instance in the game of chicken On asset markets and in market b microstructure the transaction cost is some function of the distance between the bid and ask . • Policing and enforcement costs are the costs of making sure the other party sticks to the terms of the contract, and taking appropriate action (often through the legal system ) if this turns out not to be the case. • For example, the buyer of a used car faces a variety of different transaction costs. The search costs are the costs of finding a car and determining the car's condition. • The bargaining costs are the costs of negotiating a price with the seller. The policing and enforcement costs are the costs of ensuring that the seller delivers the car in the promised condition.
  • 33. Money Cost of production is the actual monetary expenditure made by company in the production process. Money cost thus includes all the business expenses which involve outlay of money to support business operations. For example the monetary expenditure on purchase of raw material, payment of wages and salaries, payment of rent and other charges of business etc can be termed as Money Cost. Real Cost of production or business operation on the other hand includes all such expenses/costs of business which may or may not involve actual monetary expenditure. For example if owner of a business venture uses his personal land and building for running the business venture and he/she does not charge any rent for the same then such head will not be considered/included while computing the Money Cost but this head will be part of Real Cost computation. Here the cost involved is the Opportunity Cost of the land and building.
  • 34. • Cost classification from program and budget point of view
  • 35. Capital Vehicles: bicycle, motor cycle, four wheel drive Vehicles, trucks Equipment-ray machine, micro scope, other equipment with a unit cost (price) of US$100 or more Buildings, space: hospital, health centers, administrative office, storage facilities Training: Training activities for health personnel that occur only once or rarely Social mobilization, non recurrent: social mobilization activities, eg promotion, publicity campaigns that occur only once or rarely Cost Classification* by inputs by function/activity By level By source By currency Recurrent cost Personnel (All type): supervisors, health workers, administrators, technicians, consultants, casual labors Supplies: Drugs, syringes, slides, small equipment (unit cost of less than US$100) Vehicles, operation and maintenance: petrol, diesel, lubricants, tires, spare parts, registration, insurance Buildings, operation and maintenance: electricity, water heating, fuel telephone, telex, insurance, cleaning, painting, plumbing, roofing, electricity supply/appliances Training, recurrent (eg short in services course) Social; mobilization: operating costs Other operating costs not included above Training Supervision Management Monitoring and Evaluation Logistic and transport Central level Regional Level District Level Grassroots Level Ministry of Health other government ministries Local Government Bodies International Donors Bilateral Agency Charity Private Organizations Community groups Individuals Etc
  • 36. Marginal cost versus average cost • Average cost measures total costs per unit, • Marginal cost is the additional cost of producing one more unit of service, it varies as volume changes.
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43. Q. Why short run cost curve is U shaped? Short run Cost curve is composed of Total Cost, Total Fixed cost and Total Variable Cost Total cost = Total fixed cost + Total Variable cost (Average cost x Quantity) = (Average fixed cost x Quantity) + (Average Variable cost x Quantity) At first the Average Cost is too high due to large Fixed Costs and small outputs. As output increases, the Average Cost accordingly falls. When diminishing returns due to increasing variable cost, then the Average Costs start to increase This gives the Short Run Cost Curve a “U”-Shape.
  • 44. Q. Why is the long run average cost curve L shaped? • Long run average cost curve is L shaped in some industries because of the fact that they represent indefinite economies of scale derived from the optimal utilization of all the factors of production. • In such conditions, it is quite possible that firms having L shaped long run average cost might be a bigger firm which has more chances to turn in to monopoly in the future because of more access to the resources and lesser chances of expected new entrants in the market. • L-shaped curve shows that per unit cost for producing a product decline initially and then forms L-shaped which shows cost advantages for indefinite period.
  • 45. Issues to be considered in cost calculation